If a person could lift their own weight, could they sit in a chair, pick it up and fly away?

What’s with upper case, cursive Q?

Recess was always right after the pizza and corn were served. Spelling counts if you don’t want people to think you’re a dimwit. Even da Vinci couldn’t work out a person flying under their own power.

But no teacher could answer why upper case Q looks like a 2.

Drawing Out Their Points

Back before there were computers, or even electricity, there were people. People who wanted to get their points across and pass on details. At first, drawings served the purpose of a written language. They were just right, as long as you didn’t want to say much more than “Marcel killed a moose with a spear”.

Drawings had another draw back. Some people just were not good artists. They had important ideas to communicate, but lacked the talent to depict them. We know that none of these people were my ancestors because art is in my blood. Since only certain people could use them, drawn languages faded out.

Q Was Digital, When Digital Wasn’t Cool

Russian Cursive Cyrillic alphabet. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Society moved on. Eventually, it seemed that there would be some sort of symbol based system, but which?

Different cultures developed different symbols. Numbers were already an established force around the world. Pro number advocates pressed for a digit based system. They made inroads into the Cyrillic alphabet that we see used in the Russian language and in the Latin alphabet used in English, among other languages.

These pro-number advocates tried to usher in what they called a “digital age”. Their efforts failed. Numbers disappeared from written story telling and eventually, from all communication that didn’t involve mathematics. Digital age was to take on a new meaning a few dozen centuries later.

The digital age of alphabetic communication is gone…but not completely. I’m sure you’ve seen the number 3 in Russian/Cyrillic writings. The digital age also explains the 2ueer substitution of a fancy 2 for upper case Q in the cursive Latin alphabet.

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If I hadn't written this, I would use these to tell people I'd read it.

Pizza and corn? Never understood that. Pizza and salad makes more sense. And recess AFTER lunch? Another puzzle. Recess makes more sense before lunch. As for the uppercase Q, the numeral 2 just looks awkward. Always has.

I think the 7 and Z thing actually may have come from Mexico… Aztecs were pretty smart people so maybe even from there…. but the Q… that is a mystery. Not sure where it started, and I’ve never really used it. My daughter’s name is Quartney, and still, I’ve never been even the slightest bit tempted to use 2 as the first letter in her name. Even in cursive, I guess you would say, I go out of my way to make sure people realize it is a Q and not a 2 (but on a different thought all together… have you noticed that Q and 2 sound very similar as well?)

Enjoyed your take on this. As an astro-numerologist, I play with letters and numbers all the time. And, yes, I was taught to write the capital Q that way, only with the tail swinging slightly below the line. Alas, on lineless paper, where does it go? So I gave up this symbol after a few years and reverted using the printed version of the Q instead. Life is all about choice, after all. Am I being serious or using humor? You decide!

No, actually the infamous “2-shaped” Q arose from Baroque-era efforts to write the standard Q in one stroke — without picking up the pen. This required starting the Q’s oval at the bottom: the “six o’clock position” from which the Q’s tail would sprout. However, starting at this point was troublesome enough that people grew last, and wouldn’t actually go ALL the way down to “six o’clock” to start the letter. Instead, they started it only partway down (at “seven” or “eight o’clock” — eventually at “nine” or “ten o’clock”), leaving out more and more of the oval’s left side. Result: today’s conventional 2-shaped Q: which the U. S. Postal System, by the way, has tried to get handwriting publishers to change back to a REAL capital Q, because the 2-shaped one causes problems for the handwriting-recognizer robots that the Postal System now uses to sort mail.

And I agree with those being the best dishes in any school cafeteria. But why pair them up? The result is one really good lunch and four adequate lunches. Breaking the pair up spreads their deliciousness over two days.

[…] There is a concern that cursive writing is going the way of video tapes, lawn darts, and honest politicians. Many feel that the ability to communicate in a cursive hand is about to become extinct. However, if the certain lawmakers in Louisiana have their way future generations will be wondering just as I did, why the letter Q in cursive looks so strange. […]

I really enjoyed this article, and I am so glad I found it!
Thank you for closing the case on the cursive 2 mystery.
On another mysterious note:
My children are certain that I am secretly a lunch lady because I often fix a dinner that is similar to what they serve for lunch at school (there have been times I was spot on item for item), the day of, before or the day after Yet, even I cannot solve the mystery of pizza with a side of corn.